The
Unrelenting Pundit-Led Effort to
Delegitimize All Negative Reporting About
Hillary Clinton
By
Glenn Greenwald
September 07, 2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "The
Intercept"
-In his New
York Times column yesterday, Paul
Krugman did something that he made clear he
regarded as quite brave: He defended the
Democratic Party presidential nominee and
likely next U.S. president from journalistic
investigations. Complaining about media
bias, Krugman claimed that journalists are
driven by “the presumption that anything
Hillary Clinton does must be corrupt, most
spectacularly illustrated by the
increasingly bizarre coverage of the Clinton
Foundation.” While generously acknowledging
that it was legitimate to take a look at the
billions of dollars raised by the Clintons
as Hillary pursued increasing levels of
political power — vast sums often
received from the very parties most vested
in her decisions as a public official — it
is now “very clear,” he proclaimed, that
there was absolutely nothing improper about
any of what she or her husband did.
Krugman’s column, chiding the media for its
unfairly negative coverage of his beloved
candidate, was, predictably, a big hit among
Democrats — not just because of their
agreement with its content but because of
what they regarded as the remarkable courage
required to publicly defend someone as
marginalized and besieged as the former
first lady, two-term New York senator,
secretary of state, and current
establishment-backed multimillionaire
presidential front-runner. Krugman — in a
tweet proclamation that has now been
re-tweeted more than 10,000 times — heralded
himself this way: “I was reluctant to
write today’s column because I knew journos
would hate it. But it felt like a moral
duty.”
As my colleague Zaid Jilani
remarked: “I can imagine Paul Krugman
standing in front of the mirror saying,
‘This is *your Tahrir Square* big guy.’”
Nate Silver, early yesterday morning, even
suggested that Krugman’s Clinton-defending
column was so edgy and threatening that the New
York Times — which published the
column — was effectively
suppressing Krugman’s brave stance by
refusing to promote it on Twitter (the
NYT
tweeted Krugman’s column a few hours
later, early in the afternoon). Thankfully,
it appears that Krugman — at least thus far
— has suffered no governmental
recriminations or legal threats, nor any
career penalties, for his intrepid, highly
risky defense of Hillary Clinton.
That’s because — in contrast to his actually
brave, orthodoxy-defying work in 2002 as one
of the few media voices opposed to the
invasion of Iraq, for which he deserves
eternal credit — Krugman here is doing
little more than echoing conventional media
wisdom. That prominent journalists are
overwhelmingly opposed to Donald Trump is
barely debatable; their collective contempt
for him is essentially out in the open,
which is where it should be. Contrary to
Krugman’s purported expectation,
countless Clinton-supporting journalists
rushed to
express praise for Krugman. Indeed, with
very few exceptions, U.S. elites across the
board — from both parties, spanning
multiple ideologies — are aligned with
unprecedented unity against Donald Trump.
The last thing required to denounce him, or
to defend Hillary Clinton, is bravery.
That wasn’t true at first: For a long time,
journalists refused to take the dangers
posed by Trump’s campaign seriously. In
March 2016, I
wrote a column denouncing the U.S. media
for venerating feigned neutrality over its
responsibility to sound the alarm about how
extremist and menacing Trump’s candidacy
really is. But in the last few months,
Trump’s media portrayal has been
overwhelmingly (and justifiably) negative;
his
shady business scams have been
endlessly investigated and dissected
(often on the
front page of the NYT); he
and his surrogates are subjected to
remarkably (and fairly) harsh interviews;
his
pathological lying has been
unequivocally chronicled by numerous
media outlets; and few journalists have
suppressed their horror at his most
extremist policies. As BuzzFeed’s
Tom Gara
put it last month: “My Twitter timeline
is now just a continuous rolling
denunciation of Donald Trump.”
That American journalists have
dispensed with muted tones and fake
neutrality when reporting on Trump is a
positive development. He and his rhetoric
pose genuine threats, and the U.S. media
would be irresponsible if it failed to make
that clear. But aggressive investigative
journalism against Trump is not enough for
Democratic partisans whose voice is dominant
in U.S. media discourse. They also want a
cessation of any news coverage that reflects
negatively on Hillary Clinton. Most, of
course, won’t say this explicitly (though
some do), but — as the wildly adored
Krugman column from yesterday reflects —
they will just reflexively dismiss any such
coverage as illegitimate and invalid.
It
should be the opposite of surprising, or
revealing, that pundits loyally devoted to a
particular candidate dislike all reporting
that reflects negatively on that candidate.
There is probably no more die-hard Clinton
loyalist in the U.S. media than Paul
Krugman. He has used his column for years to
defend her and attack any of her critics.
Indeed, in 2008, he was
the first to observe that — in his words
— “the Obama campaign seems dangerously
close to becoming a cult of personality,”
comparing the adulation Clinton’s 2008
primary opponent was receiving to the
swooning over George W. Bush’s flight suit.
He spent the 2016 primary maligning Sanders
supporters as
unstable,
unserious losers (the straight, white,
male columnist also
regularly referred to them — including
female and LGBT Sanders supporters —
as “bros”). And now he’s assigned himself
the role as Arbiter of Proper Journalism,
and — along with virtually all other
Clinton-supporting pundits and journalists —
has oh-so-surprisingly ruled that all
journalism that reflects poorly on Hillary
Clinton is unsubstantiated, biased, and
deceitful.
The
absolute last metric journalists should use
for determining what to cover is the
reaction of pundits who, like Krugman and
plenty of others, are singularly devoted to
the election of one of the candidates. Of
course Hillary Clinton’s die-hard
loyalists in the media will dislike, and
find invalid, any suggestion that she
engaged in any sort of questionable conduct.
Their self-assigned role is to defend her
from all criticisms. They view themselves
more as campaign operatives than
journalists: Their principal, overriding
goal is to ensure that Clinton wins the
election. They will obviously hate anything
— particularly negative reporting about her
— that conflicts with that goal. They will
jettison even their core stated beliefs —
such as the view that
big-money donations corrupt politicians
— in order to fulfill that goal.
But
it would be journalistic malpractice of the
highest order if the billions of dollars
received by the Clintons — both personally
and though their various entities — were not
rigorously scrutinized and exposed in detail
by reporters. That’s exactly what they ought
to be doing. The fact that quid pro quos cannot
be definitively proven does not remotely
negate the urgency of this journalism.
That’s because quid pro quos by their nature
elude such proof (can anyone prove
that Republicans steadfastly support Israel
and low taxes because of the millions they
get from Sheldon Adelson and the Koch
brothers, or that the Florida attorney
general decided not to prosecute Trump
because his foundation and his
daughter donated to her?). Beyond quid
quo pros, the Clintons’ constant, pioneering
merger of massive private wealth and
political power and influence is itself
highly problematic. Nobody forced them to
take millions of dollars from the Saudis and
Goldman Sachs tycoons and corporations with
vested interests in the State Department;
having chosen to do so with great personal
benefit, they are now confronting the
consequences in how the public views such
behavior.
That Donald Trump is an uber-nationalist,
bigotry-exploiting demagogue and unstable
extremist does not remotely entitle Hillary
Clinton to waltz into the Oval Office free
of aggressive journalistic scrutiny. Nor
does Trump’s extremism constitute a defense
to anything that she’s done. It is
absolutely true that Trump has at least as
many
troublesome financial transactions and
entangling relationships as the Clintons
do: These
donations to the Florida attorney
general are among the most corrupt-appearing
transactions yet documented. Even worse,
Trump has shielded himself from much needed
scrutiny by inexcusably refusing to release
his tax returns, while
much of the reporting about the Clintons is
possible only because they have released
theirs. All of that is important and should
be highlighted.
But
none of it suggests that anything other than
a bright journalistic light is appropriate
for examining the Clintons’ conduct. Yet
there are prominent pundits and journalists
who literally denounce every critical report
about Clinton as unfair and deceitful, and
band together to malign the reporters who
scrutinize the Clintons’ financial
transactions. Those prominent voices combine
with the million-dollar online army that
supreme sleaze merchant David Brock has
assembled to attack Clinton critics; as the Los
Angeles Times reported
in May: “Clinton’s well-heeled backers
have opened a new frontier in digital
campaigning, one that seems to have been
inspired by some of the internet’s worst
instincts. Correct the Record, a Super PAC
coordinating with Clinton’s campaign, is
spending some $1 million to find and
confront social media users who post
unflattering messages about the Democratic
front-runner.”
All
of this means that any journalists reporting
negatively on Clinton are instantly and
widely bombarded with criticisms denouncing
their work as illegitimate, as they’ve
started noting:
Or just look at the outrage
directed last night at New York Times
reporter Maggie Haberman — who has written
story after story investigating Donald Trump
— for the crime of innocuously noting a Washington
Post story about Bill Clinton’s
multimillion-dollar payday for a largely
no-show job from a for-profit college:
It’s very common for political
factions to believe that they’re
persecuted and victimized. Even with the
overwhelming bulk of the national media so
openly aligned against Trump — with an
endless array of investigative stories
showing Trump to be an unscrupulous con
artist and pathological liar — Clinton
supporters seem to genuinely believe that
the media is actually biased against their
candidate.
The
reality is that large, pro-Clinton liberal
media platforms — such as Vox, and
the
Huffington Post, and prime-time
MSNBC programs, and the columnists
and editorialists of the New York Times and
the Washington Post, and most major
New York-based weekly magazines — have been
openly campaigning for Hillary Clinton. I
don’t personally see anything wrong with
that — I’m glad when journalists shed their
faux objectivity; I believe the danger of
Trump’s candidacy warrants that; and I hope
this candor continues past the November
election — but the everyone-is-against-us self-pity
from Clinton partisans is just a joke. They
are the dominant voices in elite media
discourse, and it’s a big reason why Clinton
is highly likely to win.
That’s all the more reason why journalists
should be subjecting Clinton’s financial
relationships, associations, and secret
communications to as much scrutiny as Donald
Trump’s. That certainly does not mean that
journalists should treat their various sins
and transgressions as equivalent: Nothing in
the campaign compares to Trump’s
deport-11-million-people or ban-all-Muslim
policies, or his attacks on a judge for his
Mexican ethnicity, etc. But this emerging
narrative that Clinton should not only enjoy
the support of a virtually united elite
class but also a scrutiny-free march into
the White House is itself quite dangerous.
Clinton partisans in the media — including
those who regard themselves as journalists —
will continue to reflexively attack all
reporting that reflects negatively on her,
but that reporting should nonetheless
continue with unrestrained aggression.